~~~~ OA I% VEltl.l - OBSERVER. crf t• ••• fit•ILDINCS," 3TA:re.'SlKti.r r POST OFFICE. 1 . ,l: ";10 1 1 , T.L.‘113 !Teri 01NT4 pti ,r l i m odTo.uce TIIREE DOLLAR IVA ; 4I•1 the expiralion of tho year. Subsorthere carrier trill he charge! FIFTT ci.Tra a OEM 111.NT3 —One Square or Ten I.iaes one in ,; two it,erlt - ne $1,50; threw tcPer :Jan,. tnt.:lli. ; mouths $2,7 ; ;,ZO: f.;:t months $5,60; one year t 9 00; •. t 4 in proportion. These rates I .0, nu!, • , a ehangerl by,epeetal 01.0 , .n of the publlahers. Audi- 1,1% - o-cf a and like airertisa ~,iutstritor's Notices $3,00; Local at• a lice; Marriage NottcesiTralTY- ‘ , bitirtry Notices (over three lines •nta ret lice. Original poetry, mt .: requelt of the editor, one C•linr • 17.1 tula neat, will be continued at ~...r ' ,son advertising., until or• , •iieil i • -i.• uriere a epee:Lied 15.31 - 10d to • '•• -V.'t have one of the buret J;•tbing .;:e ready to do any work to L entrusted to UN ILI equal style out.s,'e of the larg•st r 1,11,11 Le addrersed to iI:.:%J'N rub't&her 3.1.1 Proprietor. EICEE3IIIE3 Lwiness Directory. ill_ h..CE,Y * ATh•2S¢T AT LAIC. 11.:dgw.T , 11.1: prac . .irt ndjol❑!ng Couatii N. h i, •:. .: ThER. AY LAW, Girard, Erie County, k.ueints3 attended to with •i,)::2:. AT LAW, la Wslkeet Of P,. .mc 7 '62 I V- li N •!oonvt.m,rtt and Des!, in Shtionery, k ^ : Country no.d.re .12 r IRMR leg I iotel,fronting tb- Patrk. I= it & 31t1tVIN. . ATTOILVIETA ANTI CO7N,ELLOrt.9 AT LAtr. oni 81,211, near North West corner of the rare, ILO til'.:tiNETT. Jurrlcr: or rnn PIACI'. Office r•cnnd 910-ti, French Strpel, betwet n Fl th and Jur e (5-2. ATTW:%I:I , I AT L. Maur - Iy, Pa Cull-mu and Jetternon , o untie. p.O W. W. WILBUR. PROPRIETOR. ri , ItRISON HOUSE. :1,1 Market Street—one icua're cast of • , Warren. Sept. 29-17. t l b+EN, el: onus PEACE, Ntregon Blnek, f Patra.r Hal. , Erb-, re. t. GI. • • 1••••}N, r (A 'y /ND .rrTrict. or Tun l'nArn. and Co!le•tr.r. e est corner of e.nd ap" 31,f 0 1:0NEINIIIIIii:EM at U.' new Lae u Lau'_ a large artFort i•= ors, Wood and Willow W ire, sezare, kc , to wloch Le re , t .,, 11 of the public. vt'nEed that •r;•.tue a' can be ':ad in cnr part naar3Pl.s-1r t. Sai STABLE, on Eizhtli 111. Fine tiorehß ac,lCzr royl.to'o.l-Iy. •i I e ..:.i . I')' .% 6LI' , La Cr , 1:1 0 .1. a r.ac.row: =ESE FA. NT . , F.. 0. CLFll ,,, r.i, itnd ly p the test Troutt....; . C.1,111,1t I •,, Tile puHic 'Cl—ly • 11111611 ..Y ethl"tlYtt, Ft iv nrt7 (3601)q, .115, PO , rp,P7P, u rot{ •• MAL • •: , 1 0 T De iL , CZIS IN ~,, :17 nr_u Fe • AV, and • ""' • 1 •'•'•• ' ••• :ara. & c.,:•••• tte 1 huuso i urrasLing i:u r-115—:1' 10 ILA., 'Waterford.. l'n.. itoß,E.r L.! L, PH,florr e. • • Iv Ion!, sal es. 022,1021,321uire.: to aiti X 7l i'caler in iita• P.o lucc; Prt,lnto - g, r ‘tnrc, fluea, Li•piocet, ••• 4Jppur,,t, Erle, is r, of alll.k• a turn Trr.u , tacliP, ors b aattful 110,1, I.`• %re c^-,1 o': F. MHZ 1: V V".l 31 N Dam ph:et direct :k_,+-tr •I*. , •glt and glce n?dnr •111:11.2; of by m.til, free, or, receipt of 10 k L. P. i)Orr.:, 1! 1., 1%.,) Br° Sew York (O Roo[ • , , Block, Erie, PA. 1 :!1) Pl.ltl.E • trio I: Treavurr Department and ,ner for tiolthere, Y;'n•hinztoo, • , w.th 11.•niatain Gr; L. •• ]does, n, Pa. It•lttery, .• cal acted with ndehty and dia . ~ ., n ed and eol:ected. Applarattana . , - . ! to. Str. havinz h.; I av .. .11 tug detai.e of the various De Clil reader most I ttieem,r,ry .••••, a:alus of Government elating. maylVfs Cm Tlllll t f , • If A3D COCTSXLLOICP AT LAW • bf`pc.l:e• Crittenden MO ' • au! al: other lent tot•i • to. ::rte Warren and Form • - ' ' ton! pr , .op.ly • s• Wl:Mato & - sreeLt - • P.Johnror, W. D. Brown id l'ffil\ To Ner • : st.rrols Thiollity, itn.l Youthful tree, ne . ' t ot‘wril, W1:1 be h.pp., to ' .• '. - ee f charge) the recipe peat by the a Ivertza-ea .• and valuable remedy, . - . e at h:s p .re at .ramt• • • . ,r.av, • • ,turn ma :mil:: B. OGDEN% • _ • • 4 t., New Sores. both sews kill feud the • • apl3'Bs J 1 ;01 'A 1.. I r.) 11% CT IC.K11?--:DR• BC .'IF IC PILLS ...Jr, to I , es : ',• ' A • . •,' 5...i:V0t..!:. , N1.1.3" 1 ., inVo , . 1,1 ‘Ves.i. - n«.l, Inwintty, . • • , ':, ry-1.1 Atloctit.os;l.... 11:121t. ' i' r. , .•nr d-Ilur per box. - ' .. -• • .I.t of ~::. ordwr.f One box • - ••• ~ ..I•lresa 1.0.11 , ,, S lirri.F.K. ... - • n .". L: Irnrivrav, ! , :rex York: ' 4lO ••• PEtti /LI-3 INVALID. , a caution to young 1711. , S Pre. , qup:sine,. at the. iama ) OLP who ha, our-d lonaceir MI; r eVpit.e may h:. had , :m.11k1,111.., I,lg L. Koh.la n• N V. t• .; () I(I t, n. esslscs, • CI 1.14 4 6 , :1ttn0 c• Ae- an , .; duai aai 1.34'. , tirunsereaal Arith toil gents The of rt hasho..-ry possible ,k, %to esperis , trill he •c.r , 7,1 , 1 p na ,nh" Pr 4 ,11.0. 4.1- Tenrs— rultirn and greatest iu t Ulard. ME k: VOTTEItIip 7,FN : ECOND k VIM!) STS., ME themrr!veq, nndpr In the Potter, 2 ugl. n th• carat, b.twren eve ,rd —.•rt t‘, eur , omPrS of the old pitYic protoiliiur to girt' p•tfort Pa liftel4n. , 41, 0 "). JAN' ,T,11,n4 1) 1,17 .Cti 1,1 • 0,1,1, r• cl*Ps • 1.• •,• t, for r ,•••Q of d'iir,k,r,“ of ,:ormf Itl }ht. , toy 1 i'v fO.hin.te 117110 P Of 'III% 5a , 110,1 Hanel to sat addreits un J V.:lz) : 4 :81:1.ER, 4:l ftroadwity, N. Y. tine Agent (or tile eultedltatet CM VOLUME 36. pita NOII ISTLI'w es p..' the pot. I) none wiatch threaten Ile. P.7ery time a sick per son la pur{eti by this yegetahle r:ZO•1r, he !us leas ei• bated humors end more hie and vigor, as 1 10 7 One eln pzore by taking a mag.e due. Persons of spare habits gain desh and strength while lasting tYfori. Rear/ time we rest a fel- days or orc.tis from this purgatinn.we make new 1N1E.14 fraLa our fooJ, which replies the unsound ones that thi plio have can el t t be evacuated. Each time we ropen.t this p-rfeess we expel further quantities of Irupur.ties, which are Loin replaced by fluideless and 'nee ito p are, so that is a 1,111:t ti ue, by continuing this treatment, we bring back the whale mars of fluids or h'xmore to that grate of purity which constit.ttes health, for Brandreth's rills only take away humors which are unsound. Sold by all r•srctabie dealers in medicines. A CUL() TO TOE SUFFEILING.-190 YOU T' ellitc!,to If en, •wallow too or three hogsheads of "Socha," I.Tonio Bitter•," "Sares parins," “Nervnun Antllot's," &e., /se , aria after Ire satisfied with the result, then try one box of 01. r) Di)CTOIS BUG I a N'S ENGLI 4 II:"PECIFIO PILLS —.Aid be recto-el to heath and vipor_in leis than thirty di., e. They are pn'e./ vegetable. pleasant to take, prompt and salutary in t'..Lir elects on the broken down Ind ehatter.l e - msti:utinn. Old and young can take 1.11.1 n with advantage. OR. RUOlllbl'S rtPECIFIC PILLS cure in has than 33 days, the 'vont Cinell of Nervouenee,, iMpoLerltf, Premature Drone, , eminp Weiknere. Inatnity, and all Urinary. flexnal, and Kerrans ktreetions. no matter from what cause pro• tilted. Price, Cue "venal. per 1)01. 'eat, postpaid, by mail, on receipt of an order. Address, JAR. S. BUTLRR. No 4:7 Broadwar, N. 'Y., General Agent. P box sent to any sadreen ou receipt of price— which is One Dollar—post free. A doer ptive Circular sent on applictition. jy 19.21 a rim)THE NEEVOCs', DEBILITaTED AND DESPo s iDENT BOSH SKX.ES.—A great eta roarer having been restored to health in afew days, after many years of inisory, Is willing to aacst his satferir.g fellow-creatures by sending (free,) on the receipt of a poEtiald add , essed irnselope, a copy of the Prosta a core cruplo -ed. Direct to JOLV.I DAGNALL, Box IF3 Poet Office Brooklyn, N.Y. TAU. TOBIAS , VENETIAN HORSE L/NI• ment.—ln pint bottle*, price 50 cents. 540 Main St. Hartford, Conn. Dr. TOMAS—De az elf: I have been in the livery bust. nem for the !eat twenty years, and during that time have need all the various liniments and lotions of the day, but never hare found an wilds equal to your V!n• etian Hone Liniment. I have fairly tented it on my homes in distemper, sprains, cuts, calks, avelliug of the glande, Ac, as also for rheumatism on myself, and have always found it an invaluable remedy. CCM Rearectfally yours, 11. LITCBFIELD. Sold by all dru;glete. OMee, SG Cortlendt Street, New York . WIIIAKEIV4 Yv D., you west Whiskers cr Moustaches t Our C,rectan Compoind will force them to grow on the actootheAt face or chin. or hair on bald heads, in stx we.l. a. Paco $lOO. sent by mail everywhere, clonal snared, un rec.l of price. Addr•ea, W killtit:u & Ca., Box 1119, Brooklyn, N. Y quit, um iLti, eel AMSELL—A No of warning I anal Ca iee to three Rua . ..mtg . with Seminal Weak. Qenerai Debility, or Premature Decay, Isom what ere oldie l rAcced. Re.td , ponder, and reflect I 130 wow in time. sent tree to any add reu, for the benefit of the am clod Srnt • -77-t-rrn Addrlss 1110 CON•4l"3ll"TlVE.4.—ilotierers with Consumn— tton, Asthma, Rronchttia, or any dhiesse ref the 'llareent or !move, will be e hrerfully furbished. without charge, with the remedy be the use of which the Rev. f dwsrl A. Wtleon, ut Wil:ikairurgh, New York, way restored to hersith, alter having suffered few. e t-al years with that dread nasease, Consumption. 13 C• rs 1(11 sufferer•. ties reale 'y to worthy of an im mediate trial It will cost iv tbiur. and may be the mea,s or th lenfr.t re:: r.ttinn. Tilo,l Ilebtiillg :he R me will please address Her. 1• the rd A. Wilson, 16i South rlezond street, Will a rs:urg, litwge County. 'new York. wold W.; 3! Alllft.eT ISII 4 OI[TAIST 111SUO V LILY I—IN To , II4STING T.) F ARM eft.; AND t arc making a fought machhe which c le" the hest and cheapest portable Wine and Cofer Prem.. the dryed Clothes Wringer, and this most poles-- f il leftftur tack in the worl I. it's the only tneu adrpt ed t • talking tpple Champaign, winch is now regarded a. one of the most important chrmoveries of the age. A g n I ng•Ant aarted in every county, to whom we tilt hod out such inducemeuta as to moors $1,0410 Defore rhr:st .o The :lola one makuog app'mation from any ccuuty shall hare the exclusive agency. Full particu.. fare, terms, &c, by Circular. A-I.:resof . lIAI.L, RTED k CO., No. LS Liberty street, N. Y. En 1 - IattNIMETII'S L —The Weak, the Ce.i. sumptive, Rheumatic, Costive, Billions and Delicate, atter come thy a u.e, wit God renewed strength and life pervade every or; efi h. it framer. Evert dose makes the b not purer. The nerves com m./ICI, in the artents and ti• - Mlinst , r! In the veins. These llls, to a first effect, net upon the it blood, o-c reins the clrculatim, by which ittipurities are drips ite 1 to !le- vPito, nod toe, throw of ruch collections luto the cowrie, which °trans, by the energy dedied fr tsuilreth'it NI e, exml them from the ststem. When brat used.the ,'ills may ne^elli in grtintrtit, end even make the paZieat feel worse. This is an excellent ago. and shows the dine Imo will soon be cured. No great g icd onen achieved without some trouble in its attainment and this rale applies to the recovery of health. Sol.] by all respect e dealers in medicine. JelifT6 If MIME IiAT 111310,N lAI .—LADIF.S A , ;D GEItiILF.SII:N: 111 if you a ish t marry you can do an by addressing me. I will a.nd you. without money and lthout price, valuable informatl. n. that will enede you to marry happily and spredily, irrespective of age wealth or beauty. Ibis information will cost you nothing and if you wish to marry, I will cheerfully assist you. All let Atrictly cent lent.al. The desired lamination sent by return ruml, and no reword asked. Please enclise postage cr stamped eni slope, addressed to yonreelf. Address, 'sAl;4ll B LABBFRT. Greenpnint,Kiogs Co., New York. TIrYOU WANT To KNOW A LITTLK ON EVF.RYT RING relating to the human system„ male an] female; the senses and treatment of diseases; the m ariage custom,' of the world ; how to awry well, and a thousand things never publi.hed before, read-th. re vised and enlarged Pditho of SfrinOAL CoMmo, a curious book for curious people, and a good book for every ono. 400 pages, 100 tilaatrat.ons. Price $1 60. Contents table a rut free to any address. Books may be had at tho book rtoree, or will be sent by mall, post Old, en receipt of the price. Address, S. B FOOTS, If. D, ani 1110 Broadway, New York. I=3 MANHOOD • 9 How Lost How Restored. JUST PUBLISHED a New Edition of Da. Crl.vestarm.es CIILESII47ID Esv•T on the Taaln:a We (without medicine) of Sr/111.31.47,./1/I.IIOCA, or :clout Weasness, Involuntary Seminal Losses, hero. TVICT, !dental and Phveicai Incapacity, Impediments to Marriage, etc. ; also, Con. unrrlon, EPILZPIT and FITS, Induced by .self-indulgence or sexual extravagance. rir- Price, in • sealed envelope, only 6 cents. The eelebtated author. In this admirable essay, clearly demonstrates, from a thirty Jeans successful practice, that the ehatutug con.equences of self abuse may he rad. ica,ly curt d without the dangerous use of internal coed Iciue tm the application of the knife—pointing out a mode of cure at on simple, certain and effectual, by me ns of which every sufferer, no matter what his condition may be, can cure hinisilf cheaply, privately and radically. ear This Lecture should be to the hands of every youth and every man iv the land. dent under rail, in a plain envelope, to any addles?, on the receipt of six Gnats, or two posta.e stamps. Address the pu'J:ishers, CHAS. J. C. KLINT. Ai CO., 127 Bowery, New York, tatr3o'os-if r.,A Office Rot. ORA Reeves' ' Ambrosie,t., FOR THE lIAIR. rr lIIS EXCELLENT HAIR DRESSING and wonderful Bair Restorative still retains to precedents in fashionable circler'. and is superseding al; ott preparations, not only In this country but also in Earupe and South America. Thousands of bottlea ere annually nerd in the Court circles of Paris Loulon, Peter bale and Madrid. and the sale In dubs is enor moue. Il.r:EVEn' AMBROSIA. is composed of an oily ex tr.ct Irom herbs of wonderful virtue, and is highly Linea ted with a variety of exquisite perfumea. It effectually prevents the hair falling out, and causes It to grow rap idly, thick and long. at makes the hair curl and gives it a glossy appearance. No toilet to complete without it. Price 7.5 ceots per large bottle. Sold by druggists and dealers in fancy goods in all puts of the nisi lied world. Wholesale by all wholesale druggists in ever? , city, and at Wr.EVSS' AMBROSIA DEPOT, No .62 Fulton Street, N. Y. nicumtns co., Philadelphia. General Ko. A gout for Perinto,lvanis. mr2-1 jTAI.I'AIII.L r It tilllPEal.—Dsaa Sin : With your perna,ssion, I wish to say to the readers of your paper that I soil send. by retarri mall. to all who wish it (rue; a recipe with full directions for making and aping a simple Vegeta to Balm, that will effectually ~,, move, in ten (lays, Pimples, Blotches, Tan, Frecktee, and all imourt , l,s of the :Akin, leaving the earns /loft, clear, smooth, and beautiful. 1 will alto mall free to those honing Card Beads or thee recce simple directions and informal MO, that will en able them to have a full growth of Luxuriant Bair, Whiskers br a Moustache, in less than thlity days These recipes are valuable to both oil and young, and at they ate matioti to all who need them free of eh urge they are worthy the attention of all who prisea clear, pure "kin. or a healthy growth of hair. All applicattuns ta , swenrd ',turn mall, without charge. Berpectinily youll4 71i() CRAPSIAN T r )nl{ Chemist and Perfumer, No 831 Broadway, N. Y anlo-41 WIZEPPi illtniyelf. 11... l HALL.— Di arcrt.T PPO&ITY Ting tiv 1 ,, T, COKE; PA.. Soto' newly lilted np In the ix -el at pr. , Yed eyle, in Dow open to the public. Made IDA If ready on the arrival of all Passenger Trains, elP,ot night Cit day. ORKLBY BROS., Propri: tau. . , .. ..."... , • • .„ 00 1 7 ,- - . . .. . . , r 13 1 " - --:-...,. W a t' :. ' .' ' - ''' r 1 . . ' i '. . . . . . _ ' cf . : . :; 1... . ......:. .:-...-Z, ..: . _ :,:- .7 i'...,,,F; :" :.' -..r.. T . 5 .„..,,,,,.,......., c,....,,,...:_,. ~..,,,,,,.:„.._\:._, . ... iR,„ - ..: ..,.,,,‘ ... ... ~ ...._____ Special Notices. JAM gm a. B TIAR 420 Broadway, N York, TWO DOLLARS AND A-HALF PER YEAR, IF PAID IN ADVANCE; 13,00 IF NOT PAID UNTIL THE END OF THE YEAR. PA.;lllurts DAY • FTE RNO ON, AUG UST Sit,' 1865. OBSERVER JOB OFFICE. We would respectfully call the attention o' t i to our f wilities for doing Job Printing of every deserip tion. flaring rapid Presses and the Latest styles of Type we are prepared to do an}thing in.theijol.Linr line, in a manner equal to any other e;tabliahmeat, and on terms as reasonable as the Deal° or Cleveland °Mew. We have • Idea nearly two thousand dollars worth of mate rial to the office eines it has bees in our possersion, with the object of making it what we th.ught the coe:aunt ty needed. How well We h•T • lIII , CAse iv , / we leave the specimens of our Jnbbinz, wide)) may to: teen in emery put of North Western Pennsylvania, to testify. Those who want tasty work are, invitrd to &ye to a call. We cad do any kindof Print' or, 11 at r, n i e done elseuhere, —snub for Unquote an All kinds used by Coal Operators, All kinds used by Coal 'clippers, All kinds u-ed .zoal Fellers, dll bole ured by Merchants and Storekeepers, All kinds used by Retailers and Grocers, AU minds used by Manufacturers, All kinds wed by Medicine All kinds used by ,tneti nae . r . 4 All kinds used by Railroad Agents, II kinds used by ants, birds nred by Insurance Offices. . AII kind, used by S , oc% Coral-Antes, generally, A II Linde used by Brokers, AU kinds used by Com. and For. 'torah:nts, A 111.1111 s used by Express Hen, II kinds used by Pro'essional Men, II kinds used by Literary Societies, All kinds used by-Public Offkoers, All kinds used by Patentees, An kinds used by'Producerat of Kew Articles, All kinds used by Merchant. of all Trades, All kinds used by Architects, All kinds used by Daenerrean Establishments, All kinds used by Artists eenerally, All kinds used by Public Exhibitors, All kinds used by Managers of Social Assemblies. All kinds need by Political Managers, All kinds need by Travelling Agents, All tied., used by Farmers, or sellers of real estate, All kinds used by the sellers of Personal Property, All kin& axed by Renters, In short, all kinds need by all clasee. Orders by mail,whea sent by I esponsible parties,prompt ly attended to. Agents for Shows, Concerts,ti.c., whose responsib lily we aren't acquainted with, must pay In advanco. In cases where packages are sent out of the city by expresaand the ocraone for whom they are Intend ed have not a regular account at the °dice, the bill for tnirariably be forwarded with them. Important Announcement. GREAT SALE of Watches, Chains, Die mond More, ke flue Million Dotlare worth to be daspoeed of at One Dollar Each ! Without regard to Vine I Notto be pall for until yon know whet you are to recrirc I z , :pienlid List of Article' I All to be sold for One Dollar Each. Haell. 250 Gents' Gold Hunting-ease Watshos_____ ssl:' i to $l2O 230 lad.ea Gold and hriamelled hunting catie Watche3 31 to 70 600 Genie hu a tin veal° Silver Watches 35 to 70 2" Diamond Rings 60 to 100 5,000 Gold Pest and Neck Chaina 4to 30 3 " Gold Oral Band Bracelets 4 to 5 " Vo:d and Jet Bracelets 6to 1 0 " Chatelaine Chains and Guard Chains.. sto 2 7 " Solitaire and Gold Brooches 4to 1 5 " 'Coral, Opal, and Emerald Brooches.... 4to 3 . Gold, Cameo. and Pearl F.ar Drops 4 to 5." kosiac, Jet, Lava, k rlentine ear drops. , 4to 7,5' Coral, Op.!, and Emerald " 4to 4 " California Diamond Breast ping d 6') to 3 3 " Gold Fob sod Vest Watch-keya. 0 ,60 to 4.. Fob and Vest :Ribbon alldes 3to 3 5 " sets Solitaire Sleeve-buttons, St,de, &c. 3to 3 " Gold This:lb:ea. Pencils, .b.c ...... —.. 4to 10" Illoiature Lockets 2,50 to 1 4 " Miniature Lock-ta, Magic Spring 10 to 2 3 . Gold Toothpicks, Crones, fhe 2to 5 " Plain Gold Since 4to 1) 5 " Chased Gold bins 4to 11 9-. Son. Set aul r•ignet Rings 2,50 to 10 9 " California 1.) amend !togs 2to 10 ;5" sets La 1 :0111 * Jelrelrj—Jet and Gold__ 4to 15 6 " seta I.•idies' Jewelry—Cameo, Pearl, Of al and other atones • 4to 15 9 " (fold i',•us, tithe, , xtension liolderi and Penella 4to 10 " 6.41 Pens and I mounted 11oldArs... dto to " Gold reel and extension " 15 to 21 "5 " Ladies' Gilt and Jet Buckles. 6to 15 " LAdiez Gilt and Jet Hai Busk Bells._ 6to 10 -" Silver G .blets and Drinking Caps 6to 150 • SDveretiatora 16 to 60 " :Myer Fredt,Card, and Cabe Dav`iets.... 20 to 60 dorxrr eliiver Tea elm:lons (per d a.) 11 to 21 `• dozen 'liver Tame Spoons and Forks—. 21 to 41 ARRANDALEIk. Co., kianttfa•turers' Agents, No. 167 roadway, New York,•sanounee that all of the above et • f g cods will be sold for One Dollar each. In noose mace of the great stagnation of trade In the mancdortarin4 districts of England, through the war haring cut off thA supply of cotton. a largo I:pan:its o valtab'e Jewe:rv, intendel. for the goglish market, has been rent off for sale In this country, and most bo sold at no, sher.ate I rodrr these circum stances, Altlt•/DALE 42 Co., acting ca agents for the principal European 11111 .ufacturAra hay, resolved noon • Great Gift Distribution, subject to the f4i!osing regu lations: ca.-titivates or the various articles are tint put into envelopes ',salmi up, and wised ; and when ordered, are Wen oat without rep,: d to choke, and tent by mall, thus vying all a fair chance. C.o the receipt of the certificate, you will e. o what you are to hay., and then It it at y , ur option to rind ,he dni!ar and taYe the arti cle or not Forel:Lasers way thus obtans a Gold Watch, tit•ntnnd Ring, or ant Sot of Jewelry on our list for ono SRN . ° 25 CF.NTA FOR A CF.RTIFICATN. In all tr name:ions by mall,- we s hall charge for for warding the Pertifieate, raring postatre, an I doing the buttioess,ls coots each. which mart be en . etosed when the rertifleate is rent for. Fire Certlf.eares will be sent for ft eleven .or $2, thirty for s s, sixty. live for $lO, and • hundred for $l5. AG , 'NT:S.—We want agents in every reg;rnent, and in every.t. ,wn and rouLt7 in the country, nod those acting as such will be Cloned ten cents on every CertiSesta or tare' for them, provided their r. =Vance amounts to one dollar. a gent...lll collect n. 5 c+sta for every Cer tificate, and remit 13 cents to us, either to cult or post age stamps. Address, ARP, ND tLE At CO., apx.:'6s-3rn 167 Broadway,'N. Y. L. BROWN & CO.„ Mato Some, Brown Sc Co„) ' EMV I MrarnnITUZM Military & Naval Claims, r 2 Park Place, New York. 0 Corresponding holm In Washington, D. C., J. W. rifl er & Co., 474 14th Street. Flaring had three years' experience in the collection of Claims and the general transsclon of business m all deps.rtenents of Government, we can assure our clients and c.rrespondents that all business intrusted to us rill be vigorously and promptly attended to. We are prepared to make advances upon and negotiate the sale of claims, and purchase Quartermaster's bills sad checks, as well as collect the following classes Pensions for Invalids, Widows, Mothers and Orphan Children. Bounties for Soldiers, (Hach- rod to: wounds received In battle, those who hare served two years, and the heirs of deceased; also r.ute bounty to each me are en titled. Arrears of pay for Officers and 3oldhirs, and the belts of deceased. Navy prise money for all captures, Nave pension and balance at pay. Accounts of dit:larg.d , Illeers nettled, ordnance and clothing returns properly made oat and collected, and clearances obtained from Ordnance and Quartermaster's Departments. U. S. Revenue Stamps for ule at a discount of SU to 4% per cent. HEAD QU ARTERS CiIEAP GOODS! Wholesale and Retail GROCERY AND PROVISION STORE, WINES AND LIQUORS. F. & M. SCHLAITDECKER, are now receiving at their old stand, Ameri can Block, State street, a large and superior stock, of GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, WINES, LIQUORS, WILLOW, WOODEN, AND STONE WARE, FRUITS, NUTS, &c., &c., together with every thing found in a Housu of this kind, which they will sell as cheap as any other establishment in this city for Cash or most *kinds of country produce. They have also on haad eue of the largest and !Wet Rocks of Tobacco and Sews trier brought to Sate, to which they Write the attention of the pcblla. UP Call and see us--a Wattled:o9m la better than a al, consequently Cash Doyen will Sad great barfalu by czUini atthe • • Grocery Head Quarters! AMERICAN BLOCK, STATE STREET. Jaw 2. 1380-52 P. & V. SCRLACID ULM. Pleasure Excursions. PARTIES DESIRING TO HAVE SAIL; Esontsione on the Bey, or to visit the Peaintn Is, will find the nnie-signed tawnyt pm'''. to eceotnlno.: date Them w.th pod boats. 1 have 2 Yachts erspreerls tided oat ttr ple.snre pirtiee. in • hiot on to a numbei of Row Boats. Fishing Tackle and Balt all the time on Sand. Persons desiring to here the use of uy it my imam will find me constantly on head, at the old stand, loot of State street JAB. R. NESBITT. May 11, /11114-6EX°. iil=lE A Little VI !tile. DY 11.F.Y. DR. DONAL Beyond the smiling and the weeping. I shall be Boon; Beyond the waking and the sleeping, Beyond the sowing and the reaping, I shall be soon. Lore, rest and home! Sweet home ! Lord, tarry not, but come. Beyond the blooming and the fadinr, I shall be soul; Beyond the shining end the shading, Beyond the hoping and the dreading, 1 shalt be soon. Love, rest and home' • sweet home Lord, tarry not, but come. Beyond the rising and the setting, I shall be soon; ' Beyond the calming and the Beyond remembericg and forgetting, I shallbe soon. Love, rest and home ! • Sweet home Lord, tarry not but come. Beyond the parting and the meeting; I shall be soon ; Beyond the farewell and the greeting, Beyond the pulse's fever beating, I shall be soon. Love, rest and home ! Sweet home I Lord, tarry not, but come. Beyond the frost-chain and the fever; • I shall be soon ; • Beyond the rock-waste and the river, Beyond the ever and the never, I shall be soon. Love, rest and home ! Sweet home ! Lord, tarry not, but come. An Able Speech. • i We extract the following able and clear exposition of political issues from a speech delivered by Gen. George W. Morgan, at Mount Vernon, Ohio, on the 4th of Yuly. If every Democrat, in the land would take hold of the subject in the style of the fol lowing arguments, we should aeon reason the Abolitionists out of existence: They say that all men are created equal, ' and quote the " Declaration of Indepen dence" to sustain the assertion. Now, the phrase, " all men are created equal," either applies to the whole human family, or else it was used in a limited and re stricted sense, meaning a people of a oom mon origin, as the descendants of Euro pesos. If the phrase be true in a general sense, then the " Root Digger" of the Rocky Mountains, who has no intelligible language, but chatters like an ape, is the created equal, of the Englishman, the German, the Irishman, the Scotchmate or the American. And if such is true of the " Root Digger," it is equally true of tho Hottentots of South Africa. Dees any sane man believe that such is the fabt? If so, why is it that the " Root'Digger " and the " Hottentots" hare never risen above the lowest grade of barbarism ? Does any one believe that the East Indian is the cieeted equal of the Briton ? If so, how happens it that more than one hundred millions East Indians were crushed and con literal by less than sixty thousand Beitoes? And the American Indian, is he the created equal of the White Man ? If so, why is it that all attempts to civilize him have proved melancholy failures? And the negroes from Dahomey and Congo, from. whom the negroes of the United States have descended, are they, too, the equals of Americans? The King of Da homey has at this moment his human sacrifices, and luxuriates in his bath of human blood. If the negro race was equal to the European, or even to the Asiatic race, would they not, at some one period since the birth of Ham, their -first pro genitor, have emerged from the barbarism which enshrouds them? After the over throw of the Roman Empire. religion, civ ilization, literature were obscured by the centuries known as the dark ages; but the intellect of the white race at length broke forth, dimly at first, but afterwards with an effulgence which illumined the world. Not so with the negro, for rela tively as he was thousauds of years ago so is he pow, and 60 must he ever remain, for such is the law of his being. But it may be said that the negro must be taught to read and write, and - thus be made ,a good citizen. Education is a good thing, but where there is native intelligence, is it indispensable to constitute a good citi zen ? When the sturdy barons' forced King John to grant them the Great Char ter, not one among them could write his name—yet they lied the foundation of English liberty. Anil where there is not native intelligence, knowing how to read and write are not sufficient qualifications for citizenship. I am not actuated by any feeling of un li - kindness, and I trust by a higher motive than vulgar prejudice, when I oppose con ferring the rights of citizenship upon the negro. To be a citizen, is not, alone to have the right to vote, but to become judge, juror and legislator, for these are rights which belong to citizenship. But it will be said elicit if the negro is not competent for these high duties, he will become so. There are free negroes now living in the United States, whose grand fathers were free before them, but the grand-child of to-day, like the grand -parent of a past generation, is inferior to the white man. Before the rebellion, there Were half a million of free blacks. Tell me, he who can, the names of a dozen who have become remarkable as mechanise, farmers, poets, painters, or orators ? An emigrant ship, on the other hand, arrives from Europe, -perchance persons on board who can neither read nor write. Mark the effect of a single generation. The child is an American, it learns to read, to write, to think, to act like as American, and, in fact, is an American. Such was the case with An drew Jackson. His father was poor, ig norant and destitute: necessity drove him from the shores of Ireland, and hie first born boy after reaching the United States, not only became President, but took rank among the first statesmen of the ege. But it is said that the war bas proved the capacity . of the negro for self eovernment—his right to become a citi zen. In what does the proof consist.? Is it in the fact that negroe., free or slave, could not be found of sufficient ,intelli gence to make lieutenants, and that all commissioned officers of black regiments are white men? D . es that fact prove the equality of the race,?—the right of the negro to become a citizen ? Waa his ca pacity for self-government proven by the conspiracy at Ccarleatpn, to murder their white officers, and all white citizens, out of gratitude for being made free Cris it to be found in the mutiny of the negro troops at Memphis, Norfolk and. Ports mouth? The capacity of man for self govern. ment has long been a fruitful subject ( f discussion, and self-goiernment is stilt regarded as an experiment. In Great Britain, with her thirty millions inhabi tants, the entire real estate is owned, by thirty thousand persons, who within themselves constitute the government, and yet that government is regarded as, and perhaps is, the most liberal in Europe. Yet the great mass of that : population hive no more to do with legislation th an h .ve the Cattle which - browse on 'England's grJen meadows. Free institutions cannot be more surely overthrown than by the • degradation of the ballot. Debase suffrage, and it will be either abolished altogether, or con trolled, as in Great Britain, by corruption. - It is it fact suggestive of reflection, that those communities which have in their midst the smallest number of negroes, are the most strenuous advocates of negro suffrage. Thus, Massachusetts, with her nine thousand colored population, leads the van as the champion of black citizen , ship. But is it not strange that the negro should shun his sincere and sympathizing friends in MassaChusetts, az d seek a home among the people Of Maryland and Vit.- glob, who are represented as his worst enemies? Is there not something singu lar in the fact that New England, with all her disinterested philanthropy, with all her fraternal regard for the sable son of Africa," had according to the census of 18G0, only twenty-three thousand and tweuty.one negroes, with a white popula tion of nearly two and a-half millions ? While the slave State of Maryland, with a white population of leis than half a mil lion, had a population of seventy-four thousand seven hundred and twenty three razz negroes I And, indeed, that census shows that New England and all the free Western States, from Ohio to. the Pacific, contained five thousand, four htin dred and twenty-five fewer free blacks than the State of Maryland alone ! And Virginia, with her white population' of less than nine hundred thousand, had fifty-four thousand, three hundred and thirty-three free blacks ; while Maisachu setts, with a white population of five hundred and eighty-one thousand, eight hummed and thirteen, had only thirteen hundred and fifty-six free negroes. Why is this? How are we to reconcile the con. duet of the black man. in shunning his white brother of New England, who is so full of words in expressing his fraternal love for him 1 Is it the instinct of the colored man which teaches him that the men of New England are not his friends —that they do not wish to serve the col ored man, but to be served by him? That if the negro wishes for kindness and happy homes, he must seek them elsewhere than on the icy shores of New England ? Or, will it be said that the black man can not endure a cold climate? If such be the fact, then it is proven that he is not the equal of the white man, to whom all climates are alike. The sturdy New Eng lander, the hardy sons of frozen Norway and Denmark, form prosperous colonies in Texas, Mexico and Brazil, while the mercurial children of Sunny France P:r centuries have been established in the Outsides ; and they are acknowledged to be the beat guides employed amid the snow-drifts of' the pocky Mountains. But does this Declaration of Independ ence, fairly construed, mean that all men; without regard to race, are equal ? To interpret a doubtful part of any instru ment, the intention of the writer must be ascertained • it must be considered in con nection wit h its contents—that is, with reference to what precedes cr follows the doubtful clause or sentence, the true meaning of which is sought to be ascer tained, and the clause itself must be ccn sidered with reference to the subject mat ter treated of. The " Declaration " commences by say ing, that when it becomes necessary foe one people to dissolve the political bends which have connected them with another, people, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they.should clare the causes which' impel them to the separation. Now,. to what one people does the " Declaration " refer, when it says that a decent respect for the opinions of mankind requires that they should de clare the causes which impel them tol separation? The States were occupied by' a white, a red, and black pee le—does' the expression " one people" refer to the' white, black and red people, or to only ono of them? Had the negroes of the Colonies any political relations with Great' Britain t No ; for under the authority of Great Britain they were bought and sold. as property. Hence the negroes were not. a part of that people who dissolved the political bands which united them to Eneland. Was the position of the In diana, in a political sense, different from that of the uegroes ? No ; because the . British government regarded the Indiana as mere savages, who were to be cleared away with the wolf and the bear. Then as it was neither the Indians nor the ne • - groes who dissolved' the political bands which gaited the Colonies with the mo ther country it must have been the whites who did so. But this is rendered certain from the fact that the Colonists were the direct offspring from Great Bri-. tain, while the other races had different origins; and neither the Indiana nor the negroes were represented, directly or in directly, in the Congress which published the " Declaration.' Hence, then, it is conclusive that the word " people " was used in than instrument in a special sense, to ate= white people, or the European race, from which the Colonists sprung. Again, the clause of the " Declaration " already referred to, says, "a decent res pect for the opinions of mankind, requires that the causes which led to the separa tion should be made known." Now, the word ".mankind" taken in its general sense means the whole human family, but it is evident that such was not the meaning of the framers of the " Declara tion," for copies of that instrument were' sent to the nations of Europe, but not to any other people. Then the word "man kind" as used in the " Declaration" re fers exclusively to the European race, for -had it been intended to mean the people of China. or Egypt, or Morocco, commis ' sioners would have been appointed to have communicated the " Declaration" to them, as well as to the nations of Europe, which was not done. It is clear then that the words " people" and "mankind " are used in that instrument in a limited, and not in a general sense. The " Declaration" then goes on to lay: we hold these truth's, to be self-evident, that all men are created equal ; and in a general sense, the words " all men," like the word "mankind," embraces the whole human family. But was such the inten tion of the framers of that paper? A moment's. reflection must satisfy every one that the words "all men," like the word " mankind," were only intended to apply to the European race, and have no reference either to negroes or to Indians. When the "Declaration " waa published, every one of the thirteen States held slaves, and the author'of that paper was himself a slaveholder. Is it, then, reason able to suppose that our fathers intended to proclaim that the negroes whom they bought and sold as property, were crested equals with themselves? On the contrary, by the Constitution which was afterwards framed, negro slavery was not only re cognised, but the importation of negro slaves from Africa was authorised in ex press tams until the year 1808. A Saoscious OessavArtobt.—A COMM: pondent of the Cincinnati Gazette does not like Sherman's remark that hia soldiers are not hangmen, and gravely observes: " Now, if this sort of twaddle means any tbin a. it is intended as a fling at the courts martial which have lately been pyi ng an d hanging rebels and assusiPftiors under 440 direction of the Government etWash ington." It really looks at if it had that intention. 7. • • - 7 «rm. XUMiIER ,I 3 Sowttilag Left Undone. lIINIIY W. LONGIT'LLOW Labor with what seal we' will, Something still remains undone ; Something; uncompleted still, Waite the rising of the mu. Dy the bedside, en the stair, At the threshold, near the gates, With its menace or its prayer, Like a mendicant it waits. Waits, and will not go away— Waits, and will not be gainsayed, By the cares of yesterday Etch today is heavier made. Till at length it is, or seems, Greater than our strength can bear— As the burdens of our dreams, • Pressing on us everywhere And we stand from day to day Like the dwarfs of time gone by, Who, as Northern legends say. On their shoulders held the sky. Political Items. When men like Holt and Stanton gov ern the country, "the post of honor is the private station." The fitness of the negro for the exercise of politicalecights has been amply illus trated in Hayti. Eleven revolutions have occurred there in six years. Jurr LIKE Tuax.—The Republican au thorities at Chicago have ongted all the city•employees of Irish and German birth, and placed in their stead negroes. "A BAWLING ,Cow sow( FORGETS ITER Cai.v."—A dispatch from Springfield. 111., says contributions to the Lincoln Monu ment Fund are coming in very slowly. Gen. Cox . proposes to colonise the ne groes in Florida, dc. As New England claims to be the peculiar friend of the colored race, why not let them find a home there? The Cambria county Allegltanian, pub lished by A. A. Barker, Republican can didate for Congress in the 17th district cornea out unequivocally in favor of negro suffrage. ' The Springfield Republican thinks it. is high time the War Secretary had some of his extraordinary powers apridged, and was given to understand that he is sub ject to the ,restraints of law as well as other people. BLAci oa WIIITE.—A ;pliant C.)lonel said to a private the other day : " Are you going to this copperhead affair on the 4th of July ?" " Well," said the private, " I am going 'to the while celebration—don't know what you call it."—Bedford Gazette. Another evidence of the freedom of the press is given in the military suppression of the News, Henderson, Ky.. by order of Col. Samuel Johnson. The News opposes the Palmer administration in Kentucky, and hence there is no "freedom of speech" for it. At a recent Abolition meeting in the. city of Pittsburgh, Pa.,a revolution was passed denouncing atholies as " arch traitors to civil and religious freedom throughout the world." The Augusta (Ga.) Transcript was sus pended by military authority for an "obit uary notice" that was displeasing to them. Hail ! Land of the free and home of the brave.! The freedom of the American press! How glorious and great ! The Pittsburg Chinraercial. in the course of some very funny.remarks Over the sup pression of another newspaper, expresses its belief that strong drink is "a beverage inseparable from Democracy." How about the scene in.the Senate Chamber, on the 4th of March last, and the semi-weekly bulletins of " indisposition " since. "Brick" Pomeroy thinks this is a queer world, because in Washington Mrs. Sur ratt, a woman innocent of murder, was hung, and Miss Harris, who killed a man, was tried and found not guilty ; while a man for stabbing slightly a woman who had ruined him, was sent to prison for eight years. Ushasyne FOWL.--Sydney Smith says: "Power will intoxicate the best hearts, or wine the strongest beads. No man is good enough or wise enough to be trusted With despotic power ; for when possessed of it, others can no longer answer for him, because he can no longer answer for, himself." • The. New York Tribune says the present interest of one hundred and forty million dollars ($139,262,568 28) on the national debt will be increased to the extent of at least ten millions ($10,000,000) next Jan 'nary. Pleasant prospect, truly, for tax payers. The number cf Federal office-holders in Pennsylvania, of low and high degree, is estimated at ten thousand. They swarm in every city, county and district, and re ceive their support from a people taxed in a hundred different ways. And still we have ne, word from Abolition politicians in favor of a reduction of this .enormous number of pap-suckers. A Nsw Pusse.—The military power at •`Richmond has declared an election held in that city to be " null and void." The people did not vote as the military com mander desired, and the election is squashed. We are getting along rapidly in this land of the free 1 " Hrrstra."—Poatmaster•General Den nison sending around circulars to his Postmasters recommending them to em ploy disabled soldiers in their offices. If he wants his subordinates to do that wily does he not set the example t The taxation that is now so heavy on the laboring and manufacturing classes is a permanent thing. It must be paid this year, and the next, and the next, and for all time. Henceforth at least one-fourth of every man's earnings must go for taxes. How do you enjoy the prospect ? The following shot is.not from "a Dem ocratic marksman." Speaking of the Fanpuil Hall meeting, the New York Times declares that" the usurpation which is urged by the Boston radicals is infinitely more dangerous to the national liberties than anything we have witnessed hith erto." A New SnitxxE.—.l Republican paper says t " The place where old John Brown was hung bids fair to become a popular shrine. It is being visited by crowds of devout Northerners. * To our mind this only indicates that the fools are not all dead yet. The National lidelligencer says the danger to the country, as far as - indicated now, li es i n th e agitations, the denunciations, the distrust.' the misrepresentations, the thr e ats which some radicals constantly persist in levelling against thaßouth—as if their purpose was to drive that people c if us and iuto the utter darkness of confusion, degradation, and despair. , The New York Evenbiy Post (Rep.), ad ,vocating a let-alone policy with regard to the States lately in rebellion, says : "We are republicans; we believe that men are capable of governing thpinsehrea ; tbst,.inside of a direct and• violent resist auce,of the Government, they have a right to think la they please and act ai they, please; and that; so long as 'they do not pass the limits of order, nobody ought to interfire with their freedom." ==l • ?the- riotous Z.tck Chandlerrwho at thi oixtbroak of tbe war declared that the country needed a little " bloollatting,"-Latictnpted to address ,a regiment of returned actldiera Detroit, Michigan, but the soldiers utterly reptrdiated,lim, and it Witi alai - difficulty that he ataAsaved.irona.pentonal 'violence • by his friends,. - Goino A ISIOAD —The re1;1 Gem G. P. j 3 l'abreirstd:llll sreaehlfenie•Vkirkin a - few day_s, and depart thenceijor Eutope Epa byZialthii-o - said that he is desirous of entering the French army. He is very sulk' over"the loss of the rebel cans-, but carries himself with a self-satisfied air, as if proud of lig own participation in the conflict. The Louisville Journal remarks that "If we are to have pacification in the South, if we are to have anything .better than the universal prevalence of rage, and hate, and revenge, and red•handed vio lence throughout that vast portion of our continent during the life•time of all who are now living; we must allow to the mass es of the people, with very limited restric tion, the privilege of,self-goverhment, and all the other privileges usually exercised by a people free in name and in fact." The man who fights for the right aide. whether black or white, will be' pretty sure to vote right, so far as sustaining the Government is concerned.—Westfield Be- The Mayville 6'cntinel, commenting on the above, aays it, is true, as so far .as it can find out, all the soldiers are against negro suffrage. The following is one of the resolutions of the platform adopted. by the Coal-4- tion which nominated Lincoln atChicaro in ISCO. It is well to take "look at itoc captonally, in order to see where we have drifted: 4th. That the maintenance inviolate of the rights of the States, and especially the right of each State to order and control its own judgment exclusively, is essential to that balance of power on which the perfection and endurance of our political faith depends; and we denounce the law less invasion by armed force of any State or Territory, no matter under what pre text, as among the gravest of crimes. In view of the certainty of a split in the so-called Republican party, it is proposed to designate the - two wings of that defunct organization re9pectively, as " White Re publicans," and " Black Republicats;" the latter embracing the unmitigated nigger, and tho former those who turn up their noses the the odor of the thing, and still clasp the thing itself to their sympa thising bosoms. wjth the fond hope of ob taining a share of the spoils. As the party has never taken a name that was not a misnomer, and finds it difficult to get a new one to conceal its real character, we propose to lot them keep their last one, with the prefix above suggested. One of the favorite instrumentalities used by the " missionaries" now engaged in civilizing the South, is Abolition songs, which young . Africa is taught to sing in order to convince their former masters that the "Union is restored." We give a specimen verse from one of these reli gious melodies : " A hundred thousand soldiers Stood on the right of God, And old John Brown he stood before, Like Aaron with his rod ; A slave was there beside him, And Jesus Christ was there, And over God, and Christ, and all, Our banner waived in air." NEW None OF CAPITAL PI NISInjENT France boasts the guillotine, Cuba the garrotte, Turkey the bow string, China the sword. Other nations have other modes of depriving criminals of their lives. The United States, the greatest of nations, eclipses them all, and presents to the world a method of capital punishment which is not leas ingenious than terrible. It was reserved to us to startle the Nine teenth Century by an invention' which surpasses alike the bowl, the cord, the headsman's axe, the rack, the faggot and the stake. Its victims are neither tiling, drawn, quartered, nor burned alive. Their fate is swifter and far more dreadful. They are Joe-Hotted to death.—N. Y. New.. We regret to see, as we do from the official orders taken from the Macon 2e1 .7 egraph, which we publish below, that in discretion on the part of the Journal and Messen3er, has led to its suppression.—Al- Imola (Ga.) New Era. "Indiscretion !" The 2clegraph told some truth that was unpalatable to the military authorities—and which the New Era, while it is of the opinion that nothing incendiary was meant, yet it considers the article in " bad taste." It used to be oon sidered a universal rale that matters of taste were not disputable ; but that does not seem to hold good under military rule, neither in Austria nor in the United States. The wearing of a Kossuth hat in Austria is a punishable offense, as is the wearing 1t the United States of what was once rebel colors. So with publications. In both despotisms the law is the same. That law is the taste of the party in power. In' a speech made by Andrew Johnson in the United ettates Senate, during the last debate upon the great sectional issue which resulted in the, retirement of the Southern Senators from their seats, and in the resort to secession, he said " Had I the power, I would transport to some remote island, in some unknown sea, the leaders. and chiefs of the two great ultra factions who have put this Union and the peace of the country in great and constant danger. I refer to such men as the Senators from Massachu setts and Ohio, (Messrs. Wade and Sum ner,) on the one hand, and to the Sena tors from South Carolina•and Texas (Ilhett and Wigfall) on the other, and I would condemn them to remain there apart from the rest of the world, and leave them to carry on their baneful agitatioh among themselves, to the great relief of a coun try, which they manage to keep in per petual peril and turmoil." The sentiment then uttered by Andrew Johnson, he has never retnicted or mo The Woodstock (Canada) Sentinel rela:cs the following: On Tuesday evening of last week, while Mrs. Angus MoVea, of Wood stock, was doing some work in the kitchen. her clothes caught firo from the stove, and she ran out in the street, her clothes flaming like a torch. Assistance was at band 'mice— dictsly and lore off the burnig clothes, never theless she was sadry. burned. The shock brought on a premature delivery, and from the effects of the burning, her back being perfectly raw from the shoulders to the lamer extremity of the spine, and her thighs and legs in one complete blister. The poor Woman must 'have suffered excruciatingly, but was was relieved from pain by death on Wednes- day last at coon. She leaves a disconsolate bushand and two helpless children to mourn • her 'sad loss. , . James Lenan, in Albany,rmarried a rirl the rest of the faultily didn't like. Fre quent quarrels hiye arisen out of tlris tibe tween James an his father and brothers. Recently a broth r John came /tome from the war, and in late vat rent "worsted" James. On Frid y laet thA old dispute arose, and James stabbed John furiously with a. pockat k • ife, the blade breaking at the last stab a• d remaining in John's abdoinen.• .He • ill probably die. James is under arrest: A Burnam' Ritssnr..—We can consaigul l f timidly recommen to those su ff ering from n distressing cough Dr. Strickland's_Biellifin ons Cough Balsam . . It gires relief alntostein. stantatteous,, and ,is withal not, disagreeablo. to the take. There is no dont:di:it . the !Well Hewn Cough Balsam is one of The:hest pre. pezetions in nse. and all that its proprietor' elaime for it. We hare•tried it during tner past week: and found relief from, a tno.t dies. tressing cough.' It is prepared byTi: Btrick. end, No. 6, But Foureh street, Cincinnati, Ohio., and for sale by druggists. jyl3-3m 9